- Donald Charlton Bradley
-
Donald Charlton Bradley CBE, FRS (born 1924) is a British chemist, who won the Royal Medal in 1998.[1]
Life
He earned a first-class Bachelor’s Degree in 1946, a PhD in 1950 and a DSc in 1959, from Birkbeck, University of London. He was Chair of Inorganic Chemistry at Queen Mary, University of London, from 1965 to 1983.[2]
Bradley was recognized for his work on the chemistry of metal-alkoxides and metal-amides, their synthesis, structure and bonding, and for his studies of their conversions to metal-oxides and metal-nitrides. His advances are presently being applied in microelectronics and chemical vapor deposition.[3]
Bradley is a member of the Royal Society and a faculty member of Imperial College. He delivered the 2010 Bakerian Prize Lecture, to the Royal Society (5 March 2010).
References
This article about a British chemist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.